An Exercise.

Why is it, that no matter what agents I use or how many times I clean it, the toilet ALWAYS smells like pee?

Kind of like how no matter how many times I stick the pacifier back in TWO’s mouth, he spits it out and then cries for it back. Over and over. 

These are the constants in my life: crying and a persistent pee smell. It’s an exercise in patience and long suffering, which leaves me to wonder … will I make it? Can I persist even longer than that damn smell?!?

Now I understand how so many women get bogged down in the doldrums of motherhood and wifedom. It’s relentless. The demands never cease. This is why I put a child proof knob cover on the doors to my bedroom, my closet, and my bathroom. They might all be down here killing each other — or maybe ONE will simply smother TWO with a blanket and Husband won’t notice because he’s playing a video game — but I do have somewhere to hide if needed. 

And when I come out … I WILL END YOU, PEE ODOR. Your days are numbered.

The Things That Happen Here.

After a night of sleeping not enough, followed by a day that sucked because I was not well-rested, TWO went right back into his Woombie. I’m experimenting with different swaddling techniques. Today for one of his naps, I stuck him in a sleep sack with his arms inside.

He seemed to like that.
Random and unrelated: I run into the foot board on our bed regularly. Here is my latest injury. 

It hurts. A lot. Also, it’s spreading.
One final, random, and also unrelated thing … ONE threw a big blanket over his little brother’s face this morning, ran away, and hid. Which is probably for the best, because I had time to calm down while I conducted my search for him. 
I finally found him here. 

It seems strange to me that any of us survive in this house on any given day. But then I think about the people who live in truly deplorable situations (like Haiti, for example), and I feel stupid for showing everyone my super huge bruise. 

Ringing.

My ears are RINGING. Like actually, physically, hurting from three-year-old chatter. Nonstop. All. Day. Long.

Mommy. Mommy. MOMMY! Baby Asher smells like pepperoni. Let me smell you. Oh! You smell like pepperoni too! Do you have a horse, Mommy? A real horse? Not a pretend horse, but a real one, with a mouth? What about goldfish? No, not the crackers. Real goldfish. The kind that swim. Why don’t we have fish in the house? Fish don’t eat people. Did you know that, Mommy? Sometimes big fish eat small fish, but they don’t eat people. It would be safe to have one. I wouldn’t let it hurt you. Or the baby … Mommy. Mommy. Mommy. Where are  you going? What is that? What are you doing? What are you drinking? Is that juice? Can I have some? Why not?

Yes. It’s juice. Fermented juice. 

I’m exhausted.

Sleep Training.

Last night was TWO’s first night sleeping without his Woombie. A Woombie is a zip-up swaddler that literally saved my sanity when colic was taking over my life. It’s really cute, in a Hannibal Lecter kind of way.

Yes, those are my feet.

I had an epiphany two days ago and realized that TWO will never learn how to self-soothe, and therefore sleep like the rock I wish he would, without access to his hands. So that means sleeping without the straightjacket. That scares the crap out of me.

It’s not the same as when ONE was three months old and we were growing out of the hellish colic phase. I could let ONE fuss and cry if needed — I didn’t jump out of bed at every little sound. But this time it’s different. I don’t sleep much. Because if TWO gets cranked up, and he can get to that point quickly, his big brother will wake up and that opens up a whole new problem I don’t care to deal with in the middle of the night.

Last night, at midnight, both kids were awake and Husband was snoring soundly through all of it. I finally chose to handle it by pointing a serious Mom finger at my older boy … I have a vague recollection of saying something like I don’t want to hear it/go back to sleep/you better keep your butt in bed … and apparently it scared him into quieting down. He never came out of his room. He whined and then went back to sleep.

Since when did I learn the Mom finger? 

Probably when I decided to start using a switch.

Happy.

Sometimes, when people meet me, they mistake my happiness for ditziness. It’s happened to me my whole life. It used to offend me … if I found out later. But now I just think it’s FUNNY.

Another common mistake: thinking that niceness = weakness. 

It does not.

I am happy because I choose to be happy. I have problems I could focus on, if I wanted to. I could let them drag me down. I could harp on them. But why? Why would I want to be unhappy, when I can be happy instead? 

This is something I’ve never understood about the people who are wallowing in their sorrows and can’t or don’t want to pull themselves out of it. These are usually the same people who think I’m ditzy.

I strongly feel that you get out of life what you put into it. I complain and bitch as much as the next person, but at the end of the day I really am happy with everything that I have. We get one chance to live this life. I recommend LIVING it, problems and all.

This concludes today’s sermon.

It’s Time!

The Christmas cards have been ordered. Because this is the only picture we have of all four of us. 

It took 11 weeks and 4 days for it to happen, but this was the first time someone in our family wasn’t wearing pajamas. The only reason why is because it was a holiday (Thanksgiving) and we were at someone else’s home.

Immediately after this picture was taken, ONE went to dig in the dirt, TWO’s overalls came off, and Husband probably unbuttoned his pants.

It’s Here!!!!

Finally! It’s Thanksgiving! 

My cheesecake is refrigerating. All I have to do between now and noon is put the praline topping on it, make myself and my family presentable, and show up. The “make myself and my family presentable” part is what concerns me the most, and also why I have been up since 4:30.

Something about wrangling two children into nice clothes and making sure there isn’t crust in their ears is pretty damn hard. Not to mention, I have no idea what I’m even going to wear today. My wardrobe is a confusing mixture of too-small and barely-fitting items … every time I step into my closet I feel like I’m trying to solve a riddle.

Husband might be able to help with the kids. But usually what happens is he waits until the last possible moment to start getting himself ready, and generally this is during the peak of the wrangling period, when I need the MOST help. He also cannot be trusted to make sure they don’t mess up their clothes before we leave the house. 

One thing I can say for him, he is excellent at making sure I am left alone for however long it takes me to get myself together. I think he has learned to appreciate (accept?) the fact that I am semi-high maintenance (very high maintenance?) and it takes me at least an hour to get ready. I may be the only female in this family, but that does not mean I’ll be lowering my standards when I actually have somewhere to go besides the grocery store.

Again, this is why I’ve been up since 4:30. Gobble, gobble!

Turkey Time Is Nigh.

Tick tock, turkey.

I LOVE THANKSGIVING. I took it upon myself to teach ONE about the holiday by bringing home pilgrim and Mayflower stickers from Target and explaining to him what a cornucopia is. A big horn full of stuff, that’s what. And … that was the extent of our learning. Then we made leaf-shaped cookies and he ate a good portion of raw dough.

Two things have made me feel especially thankful today. First, I have decided to embrace the switch. As in, a thin branch to swat legs with. Because nothing, and I mean NOTHING, is working to effectively discipline my three-year-old … and I am unwilling to allow him to continue to throw ridiculous, out of control temper tantrums.

Embracing the switch isn’t what is making me feel thankful. It’s the fact that I haven’t had to use it yet. I dread it. I know it’s going to sting like hell. But if it works, then it will be worth it. ONE keeps nervously talking about it. He seems to instinctively know that that little branch is about to turn the tide.

Second, I am so very thankful that my parents are coming to town tomorrow afternoon. They are lovely people. I miss them terribly. It was actually my dad’s idea to implement the switch. He sent me an email today that read, Become one with the switch. May the force be with you.

Thank you, Dad. I need something to be with me. Currently, it’s this. I keep it on my person at all times. And I’m not afraid to use it.